Prince William Fears It Could Be Damaging To Label Health Care Workers 'Heroes'
Prince William is cautioning people who are quick to label health care workers as “heroes” amid the coronavirus pandemic, as the inspiring characterization can lead to detrimental health effects for workers.
While he fully supports the staff of the National Health Service (NHS) and wants them to be hailed as heroic and brave, the Duke of Cambridge said on BBC’s “The One Show” on Thursday that he also wants the workers to “come through this in one piece” with their mental health intact.
“We made the NHS frontline staff, rightly, heroes,” he says during a clip on the show. “But in doing so, we once again give them the burden that we gave our soldiers fighting in the war, where everyone was so grateful and wanted to show their appreciation as to their fighting for their freedoms and everything.”
The duke said that “we’ve got to be very careful with the language that we use” to make sure that workers “come through this in one piece” and aren’t left “broken.”
It's a #TheOneShow exclusive!
Here's a look at the Duke of Cambridge's conversation about mental health and protecting the wellbeing of our health workers ahead of the documentary, 'Football, Prince William and Our Mental Health' on @bbcone tonight. pic.twitter.com/OZBPbVIpA7— BBC The One Show (@BBCTheOneShow) May 28, 2020
“They should rightly be hailed as superstars, and brave, and wonderful staff, but I’m very conscious from a mental health point of view that we don’t alienate some of them,” he said.
“Where they feel that once they have this hero tag, they can no longer shake that, and therefore they can’t ask for support, they have to be this strong pillar of strength, when actual fact what we need them to be is examples of positive mental health,” he added.
The Duke of Cambridge discusses mental health ― and specifically the stigma surrounding men’s mental health ― in a new BBC One documentary that premiered on Thursday.
In “Football, Prince William And Our Mental Health,” the royal talks about why “it’s OK to not be OK.” In one particularly poignant moment, William delves into the emotions he felt becoming a parent, and how it brought back the feelings he experienced losing his mother, Princess Diana.
“I think when you’ve been through something traumatic in life, and that is ― like you say ― your dad not being around, my mother dying when I was younger, the emotions come back, in leaps and bounds,” he says to former professional soccer player Marvin Sordell. “It’s a very different phase of life, and there’s no one there to kind of help you.”
Subscribe to HuffPost’s Watching the Royals newsletter for all things Windsor (and beyond).
A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus
Stay up to date with our live blog as we cover the COVID-19 pandemic
7 essential pieces of relationship advice for couples in quarantine
What you need to know about face masks right now
How to tell if you need to start doing online therapy
Lost your job due to coronavirus? Here’s what you need to know.
Parenting during the coronavirus crisis?
What coronavirus questions are on your mind right now? We want to help you find answers.
Everyone deserves accurate information about COVID-19. Support journalism without a paywall — and keep it free for everyone — by becoming a HuffPost member today.
Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today.
This article originally appeared on HuffPost.